I think you are talking about the core problem of a social safety net that was designed with the following assumption: people retired at 65 and they died between 65 and 72. That meant, by the way, that a lot of the people who run into disease between the ages of 65 and 82 were not part of that assumption back then, because it wasn't part of our demographic reality. It is now, and most of our programs are still based on that old construct.
So in any fundamental rethinking, including with respect to poverty, disability, illness, particularly mental illness, because our understanding of what that is has changed and the way in which it's treated has changed, clearly our systems do not connect. That's not the fault of present government, previous government, provincial governments; it's just that it's so complex that people have avoided it.
I think one of the opportunities for the committee is to recommend one or two breakthrough options, where we can make progress that sends a signal that we have to begin to update the whole system, because the demographic reality is that we actually want people to live a longer life. We actually want people to have grandchildren. We actually want people to be able to fight cancer and come back, fight mental illness and reintegrate. We don't want to discourage that, but our system is not yet structured to address that, and that may be one of the areas we didn't look at in great detail in terms of timing. That may be something this committee in its wisdom may choose to consider.